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Arianism (Koine Greek: Ἀρειανισμός, Areianismós)[1] is a Christological doctrine that rejects the traditional notion of the Trinity, teaching that Jesus was created by God and is therefore distinct from God. It is named after its proponent Arius (250 or 256 – 336) and is regarded as heretical by most modern mainstream branches of Christianity.[2] Arianism is held by a minority of modern denominations, although some of these groups espouse related doctrines such as Socinianism, and others avoid the term "Arian" because of its historically negative connotations. Modern denominations sometimes associated with the teaching include Jehovah's Witnesses,[3] some churches within the Churches of Christ (among them the movement's founder, Barton W. Stone),[4] and certain Hebrew Roots Christians and Messianic Jews, although many Messianic Jews adhere to Nicene Christianity.[5]

It is first attributed to Arius,[1][6][7] a Christian presbyter who preached and studied in Alexandria, Egypt,[1] although it developed out of various preexisting strands of Christianity which differed from later Nicene Christianity in their view of Christology. Arian theology holds that Jesus Christ is the Son of God,[a][b] who was begotten by God the Father[6] with the difference that the Son of God did not always exist but was begotten/made[c] before time by God the Father;[d] therefore, Jesus was not coeternal with God the Father,[6] but nonetheless Jesus began to exist outside time.[e]

Arius's trinitarian theology, later given an extreme form by Aetius and his disciple Eunomius and called anomoean ('dissimilar'), asserts a total dissimilarity between the Son and the Father.[10] Arianism holds that the Son is distinct from the Father and therefore subordinate to him.[7] The term Arian is derived from the name Arius; it was not what the followers of Arius's teachings called themselves, but rather a term used by outsiders.[11] The nature of Arius's and his supporters' teachings were opposed to the theological doctrines held by Homoousian Christians regarding the nature of the Trinity and the nature of Christ. Homoousianism and Arianism were contending interpretations of Jesus's divinity, both based upon the trinitarian theological orthodoxy of the time.[12][13]

Homoousianism was formally affirmed by the first two ecumenical councils;[13] since then, Arianism has been condemned as "the heresy or sect of Arius".[14] Trinitarian (Homoousian) doctrines were vigorously upheld by Patriarch Athanasius of Alexandria, who insisted that Jesus (God the Son) was "same in being" or "same in essence" with God the Father. Arius dissented: "If the Father begat the Son, then he who was begotten had a beginning in existence, and from this it follows there was a time when the Son was not."[13] The ecumenical First Council of Nicaea of 325 declared Arianism to be a heresy.[15] According to Everett Ferguson, "The great majority of Christians had no clear views about the nature of the Trinity and they did not understand what was at stake in the issues that surrounded it."[15]

Arianism is also used to refer to other nontrinitarian theological systems of the 4th century, which regarded Jesus Christ—the Son of God, the Logos—as either a begotten creature of a similar or different substance to that of the Father, but not identical (as Homoiousian and Anomoeanism) or as neither uncreated nor created in the sense other beings are created (as in semi-Arianism).

Origin

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Some early Christians whose beliefs would have fallen under 'orthodoxy' in the third and fourth centuries denied the eternal generation of the Son; they viewed the Son as having been begotten in time. These include Tertullian and Justin Martyr.[16][17] Tertullian is considered a pre-Arian. Among the other church fathers, Origen was accused of Arianism for using terms like "second God", and Patriarch Dionysius of Alexandria was denounced at Rome for saying that Son is a work and creature of God (i.e., a created being).[18] However, the subordinationism of Origen is not identical to Arianism, and it has been generally viewed as closer to the Nicene-Constantinopolitan view of the Trinity.[19][20]

Controversy over Arianism arose in the late 3rd century and persisted throughout most of the 4th century. It involved most church members—from simple believers, priests, and monks to bishops, emperors, and members of Rome's imperial family. Two Roman emperors, Constantius II and Valens, became Arians or semi-Arians, as did prominent Gothic, Vandal, and Lombard warlords both before and after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. The antipopes Felix II[21] and Ursinus[f] were Arian, and Pope Liberius was forced to sign the Arian Creed of Sirmium of 357—though the letter says he willingly agreed with Arianism.[22][23][24][25] Such a deep controversy within the early Church during this period could not have materialized without significant historical influences providing a basis for the Arian doctrines.[26]

An imagined portrait of Arius. Detail of a Cretan School icon, c. 1591, depicting the First Council of Nicaea

Arius had been a pupil of Lucian of Antioch at Lucian's private academy in Antioch and inherited from him a modified form of the teachings of Paul of Samosata.[27] Arius taught that God the Father and the Son of God did not always exist together eternally.[28]

Beliefs

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Little of Arius's own work survives except in quotations selected for polemical purposes by his opponents, and there is no certainty about what theological and philosophical traditions formed his thought.[29] The influence from the One of Neoplatonism was widespread throughout the Eastern Roman Empire, and this influenced Arius.[30][31][32][33][34]

Arius's basic premise is that only God is independent of existing. Since the Son is dependent, he must, therefore, be called a creature.[35] Arians put forward a question for their belief: "Has God birthed Jesus willingly or unwillingly?" This question was used to argue that Jesus is dependent for his existence since Jesus exists only because God wants him to be.[9]

Arianism taught that the Logos was a divine being created by God the Father before the world's creation, serving as the medium for creation, and that the Son of God is subordinate to the Father.[36] The concept of the Logos refers to an inner attribute of God associated with wisdom. Jesus is identified as the Logos due to a supposed resemblance to this inner aspect of God's nature.[9]

A verse from Proverbs was used that, according to Arianism, spoke of the creation of the Son by God: "The Lord created me at the beginning of his work."[37][38] Therefore, they posited, the Son was rather the very first and the most perfect of God's creatures, and he was called "God" only by the Father's permission and power.[39][40] The term "Son" is ambiguous, as Arians use adoptionist theology to support the belief that Jesus was created ex nihilo by the Father.[9]

Arians do not believe in the traditional doctrine of the Trinity.[41][42] The letter of the Arian bishop Auxentius of Durostorum[43] regarding the Arian missionary Ulfilas (c. 311–383) gives an overview of Arian beliefs. Ulfilas, ordained by Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, became a missionary to the Goths and believed that God the Father, the "unbegotten" Almighty, is the only true God.[44] According to Auxentius, Ulfilas believed the Son of God, Jesus, the "only-begotten god",[45] was begotten before time began.[46] The Holy Spirit, he wrote, is the illuminating and sanctifying power of God. Using 1 Corinthians 8:5–6 as a proof text:

Indeed, even though there may be so-called gods in heaven or on earth—as in fact there are many gods and many lords/masters—yet for us there is one God (Gk. theos – θεός), the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord/Master (kyrios – κύριος), Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist.

The creed of Ulfilas, which concludes the letter mentioned above,[43] distinguishes God the Father ("unbegotten"), who is the only true God, from the Son of God ("only-begotten") and the Holy Spirit, the illuminating and sanctifying power, which is neither God the Father nor the God the Son:

I, Ulfila, bishop and confessor, have always so believed, and in this, the one true faith, I make the journey to my Lord; I believe in only one God the Father, the unbegotten and invisible, and in his only-begotten Son, our Lord/Master and God, the designer and maker of all creation, having none other like him. Therefore, there is one God of all, who is also God of our God; and in one Holy Spirit, the illuminating and sanctifying power, as Christ said after his resurrection to his apostles: "And behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you; but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be clothed with power from on high"[47] and again "But ye shall receive power, when the Holy Ghost is come upon you";[48] Neither God nor Lord, but the faithful minister of Christ; not equal, but subject and obedient in all things to the Son. And I believe the Son to be subject and obedient in all things to God the Father.

A letter from Arius to the Arian Eusebius of Nicomedia (died 341) states the core beliefs of the Arians:

Some of them say that the Son is an eructation, others that he is a production, others that he is also unbegotten. These are impieties to which we cannot listen, even though the heretics threaten us with a thousand deaths. But we say and believe and have taught, and do teach, that the Son is not unbegotten, nor in any way part of the unbegotten; and that he does not derive his subsistence from any matter; but that by his own will and counsel he has subsisted before time and before ages as perfect as God, only begotten and unchangeable, and that before he was begotten, or created, or purposed, or established, he was not. For he was not unbegotten. We are persecuted because we say that the Son has a beginning but that God is without beginning.

— Theodoret: Arius's Letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, translated in Peters' Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe, p. 41

Principally, the dispute between Trinitarianism and Arianism was about two questions:

  • has the Son always existed eternally with the Father, or was the Son begotten at a certain time in the past?
  • is the Son equal to the Father or subordinate to the Father?

For Constantine, these were minor theological points that stood in the way of uniting the Empire, but for the theologians, it was of huge importance; for them, it was a matter of salvation.[13]

For the theologians of the 19th century, it was already obvious that, in fact, Arius and Alexander/Athanasius did not have much to quarrel about; the difference between their views was very small, and the end of the fight was by no means clear during their quarrel, both Arius and Athanasius suffering a great deal for their own views. Arius was the father of Homoiousianism, and Alexander was the father of Homoousianism, which Athanasius championed. For those theologians, it was clear that Arius, Alexander, and Athanasius were far from a true doctrine of the Trinity, which developed later, historically speaking.[49]

Guido M. Berndt and Roland Steinacher state clearly that the beliefs of Arius were acceptable ("not especially unusual") to a huge number of orthodox clergy; this is the reason why such a major conflict was able to develop inside the Church since Arius's theology received widespread sympathy (or at least was not considered to be overly controversial) and could not be dismissed outright as individual heresy.[6]

Homoian Arianism

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Arianism had several different variants, including Eunomianism and Homoian Arianism. Homoian Arianism is associated with Acacius and Eudoxius. Homoian Arianism avoided the use of the word ousia to describe the relation of Father to Son, and described these as "like" each other.[50] Hanson lists twelve creeds that reflect the Homoian faith:[51]

  1. The Second Sirmian Creed of 357
  2. The Creed of Nice (Constantinople) 360
  3. The creed put forward by Acacius at Seleucia, 359
  4. The Rule of Faith of Ulfilas
  5. The creed uttered by Ulfilas on his deathbed, 383
  6. The creed attributed to Eudoxius
  7. The Creed of Auxentius of Milan, 364
  8. The Creed of Germinius professed in correspondence with Ursacius of Singidunum and Valens of Mursa
  9. Palladius's rule of faith
  10. Three credal statements found in fragments, subordinating the Son to the Father

Struggles with orthodoxy

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First Council of Nicaea

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Constantine burning Arian books, illustration from a compendium of canon law, c. 825

In 321, Arius was denounced by a synod at Alexandria for teaching a heterodox view of the relationship of Jesus to God the Father. Because Arius and his followers had great influence in the schools of Alexandria—counterparts to modern universities or seminaries—their theological views spread, especially in the eastern Mediterranean.[52]

By 325, the controversy had become significant enough that the Emperor Constantine called an assembly of bishops, the First Council of Nicaea, which condemned Arius's doctrine and formulated the original Nicene Creed of 325.[53] The Nicene Creed's central term, used to describe the relationship between the Father and the Son, is Homoousios (Ancient Greek: ὁμοούσιος),[54][55][56] or Consubstantiality, meaning "of the same substance" or "of one being". The Athanasian Creed is less often used but is a more overtly anti-Arian statement on the Trinity.[57][58]

The focus of the Council of Nicaea was the nature of the Son of God and his precise relationship to God the Father. (See Paul of Samosata and the Synods of Antioch.) Arius taught that Jesus Christ was divine or holy and was sent to Earth for the salvation of mankind,[41] but that Jesus Christ was not equal to God the Father (infinite, primordial origin) in rank, and that God the Father and the Son of God were not equal to the Holy Spirit.[28] Under Arianism, Christ was instead not consubstantial with God the Father since both the Father and the Son under Arius were made of "like" essence or being (see homoiousia) but not of the same essence or being (see homoousia).[60]

In the Arian view, God the Father is a deity and is divine; the Son of God is not a deity, but is still divine.[41] God the Father sent Jesus to earth for salvation of mankind.[44] Ousia is essence or being, in Eastern Christianity, and is the aspect of God that is completely incomprehensible to mankind and human perception. It is all that subsists by itself and which has not its being in another,[61] God the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit all being uncreated.[g]

According to the teaching of Arius, the preexistent Logos and thus the incarnate Jesus Christ was a begotten being; only the Son was directly begotten by God the Father, before ages, but was of a distinct, though similar, essence or substance from the Creator. His opponents argued that this would make Jesus less than God and that this was heretical.[59] Much of the distinction between the differing factions was over the phrasing that Christ expressed in the New Testament to express submission to God the Father.[59] The theological term for this submission is kenosis. This ecumenical council declared that Jesus Christ was true God, co-eternal and consubstantial (i.e., of the same substance) with God the Father.[62][h]

Constantine is believed to have exiled those who refused to accept the Nicaean Creed—Arius himself, the deacon Euzoios, and the Libyan bishops Theonas of Marmarica and Secundus of Ptolemais, along with the bishops who signed the creed but refused to join in condemnation of Arius, Eusebius of Nicomedia and Theognis of Nicaea. The emperor also ordered all copies of the Thalia, the book in which Arius had expressed his teachings, to be burned. However, there is no evidence that his son and ultimate successor, Constantius II, a Semi-Arian Christian, was exiled.[citation needed]

Although he was committed to maintaining what the Great Church had defined at Nicaea, Constantine was also bent on pacifying the situation and eventually became more lenient toward those condemned and exiled at the council. First, he allowed Eusebius of Nicomedia, who was a protégé of his sister, and Theognis to return once they had signed an ambiguous statement of faith. The two, and other friends of Arius, worked for Arius's rehabilitation.[64][65][66]

At the First Synod of Tyre in AD 335, they brought accusations against Athanasius, now bishop of Alexandria, the primary opponent of Arius. After this, Constantine had Athanasius banished since he considered him an impediment to reconciliation. In the same year, the Synod of Jerusalem under Constantine's direction readmitted Arius to communion in 336. Arius died on the way to this event in Constantinople. Some scholars suggest that Arius may have been poisoned by his opponents.[64] Eusebius and Theognis remained in the Emperor's favor; when Constantine -who had been a catechumen much of his adult life- accepted baptism on his deathbed, it was from Eusebius of Nicomedia.[67]

Condemnation by the Council of Nicaea

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Emperor Constantine the Great summoned the First Council of Nicaea, which defined the dogmatic fundaments of Christianity; these definitions served to rebut the questions posed by Arians.[68] Since Arius was not a bishop, he was not allowed to sit on the council, and it was Eusebius of Nicomedia who spoke for him and the position he represented.[67] All the bishops who were there were in agreement with the major theological points of the proto-orthodoxy,[69] since at that time all other forms of Christianity "had by this time already been displaced, suppressed, reformed, or destroyed".[69][70]

Although the proto-orthodox won the previous disputes, due to the more precise defining of orthodoxy, they were vanquished with their own weapons, ultimately being declared heretics, not because they would have fought against ideas regarded as theologically correct, but because their positions lacked the precision and refinement needed by the fusion of several contradictory theses accepted at the same time by later orthodox theologians.[71]

Of the roughly 300 bishops in attendance at the Council of Nicaea, two bishops did not sign the Nicene Creed that condemned Arianism.[72] Constantine the Great also ordered a penalty of death for those who refused to surrender the Arian writings:

In addition, if any writing composed by Arius should be found, it should be handed over to the flames, so that not only will the wickedness of his teaching be obliterated, but nothing will be left even to remind anyone of him. And I hereby make a public order, that if someone should be discovered to have hidden a writing composed by Arius, and not to have immediately brought it forward and destroyed it by fire, his penalty shall be death. As soon as he is discovered in this offence, he shall be submitted for capital punishment. ...

— Edict by Emperor Constantine against the Arians[73]

Ten years after the Council of Nicaea, Constantine the Great, who was himself later baptized by the Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia in 337 AD,[74][67][75] convened another gathering of church leaders at the regional First Synod of Tyre in 335, attended by 310 bishops, to address various charges mounted against Athanasius by his detractors, such as "murder, illegal taxation, sorcery, and treason", following his refusal to readmit Arius into fellowship.[13] Athanasius was exiled to Trier (in modern Germany) following his conviction at Tyre of conspiracy, and Arius was, effectively, exonerated.[76]

Athanasius eventually returned to Alexandria in 346, after the deaths of both Arius and Constantine. Though Arianism had spread, Athanasius and other Nicene Christian church leaders crusaded against Arian theology, and Arius was anathemised and condemned as a heretic once more at the ecumenical First Council of Constantinople of 381, attended by 150 bishops.[77][13] The Roman Emperors Constantius II (337–361) and Valens (364–378) were Arians or Semi-Arians, as was the first King of Italy, Odoacer (433?–493), and the Lombards were also Arians or Semi-Arians until the 7th century. The ruling elite of Visigothic Spain was Arian until 589. Many Goths adopted Arian beliefs upon their conversion to Christianity. The Vandals actively spread Arianism in North Africa.

Aftermath of Nicaea

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Once the orthodox Trinitarians succeeded in defeating Arianism, they censored any signs that the perceived heresy left behind. This mosaic in the Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna has had images of the Arian king, Theoderic, and his court removed. On some columns their hands remain.

The First Council of Nicaea did not end the controversy, as many bishops of the Eastern provinces disputed the homoousios, the central term of the Nicene Creed, as it had been used by Paul of Samosata, who had advocated a monarchianist Christology. Both the man and his teaching, including the term homoousios, had been condemned by the Synods of Antioch in 269.[78] Hence, after Constantine's death in 337, open dispute resumed again. Constantine's son Constantius II, who had become emperor of the eastern part of the Roman Empire, actually encouraged the Arians and set out to reverse the Nicene Creed.[79] His advisor in these affairs was Eusebius of Nicomedia, who had already at the Council of Nicaea been the head of the Arian party, and was made the bishop of Constantinople.

Constantius used his power to exile bishops adhering to the Nicene Creed, especially St Athanasius of Alexandria, who fled to Rome.[80] In 355 Constantius became the sole Roman emperor and extended his pro-Arian policy toward the western provinces, frequently using force to push through his creed, even exiling Pope Liberius and installing Antipope Felix II.[81]

The Third Council of Sirmium in 357 was the high point of Arianism. The Seventh Arian Confession (Second Sirmium Confession) held that both homoousios (of one substance) and homoiousios (of similar substance) were unbiblical and that the Father is greater than the Son.[82] This confession was later known as the Blasphemy of Sirmium.

But since many persons are disturbed by questions concerning what is called in Latin substantia, but in Greek ousia, that is, to make it understood more exactly, as to 'coessential,' or what is called, 'like-in-essence,' there ought to be no mention of any of these at all, nor exposition of them in the Church, for this reason and for this consideration, that in divine Scripture nothing is written about them, and that they are above men's knowledge and above men's understanding;[83]

As debates raged in an attempt to come up with a new formula, three camps evolved among the opponents of the Nicene Creed. The first group mainly opposed the Nicene terminology and preferred the term homoiousios (alike in substance) to the Nicene homoousios, while they rejected Arius and his teaching and accepted the equality and co-eternality of the persons of the Trinity. Because of this centrist position, and despite their rejection of Arius, they were called "Semi-Arians" by their opponents.

The second group also avoided invoking the name of Arius, but in large part followed Arius's teachings and, in another attempted compromise wording, described the Son as being like (homoios) the Father. A third group explicitly called upon Arius and described the Son as unlike (anhomoios) the Father. Constantius wavered in his support between the first and the second party, while harshly persecuting the third.

Epiphanius of Salamis labeled the party of Basil of Ancyra in 358 "Semi-Arianism". This is considered unfair by Kelly who states that some members of the group were virtually orthodox from the start but disliked the adjective homoousios while others had moved in that direction after the out-and-out Arians had come into the open.[84]

The debates among these groups resulted in numerous synods, among them the Council of Serdica in 343, the Fourth Council of Sirmium in 358 and the double Council of Rimini and Seleucia in 359, and no fewer than fourteen further creed formulas between 340 and 360. This lead the pagan observer Ammianus Marcellinus to comment sarcastically: "The highways were covered with galloping bishops."[85] None of these attempts was acceptable to the defenders of Nicene orthodoxy. Writing about the latter councils, Saint Jerome remarked that the world "awoke with a groan to find itself Arian."[86][87]

After Constantius's death in 361, his successor Julian, a devotee of Rome's pagan gods, declared that he would no longer attempt to favor one church faction over another, and allowed all exiled bishops to return. This increased dissension among Nicene Christians. The emperor Valens, however, revived Constantius's policy and supported the "Homoian" party,[88] exiling bishops and often using force. During this persecution many bishops were exiled to the other ends of the Roman Empire, e.g., Saint Hilary of Poitiers to the eastern provinces. These contacts and their common plight led to a rapprochement between the western supporters of the Nicene Creed and the homoousios and the eastern Semi-Arians.

Council of Constantinople

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It was not until the co-reigns of Gratian and Theodosius that Arianism was effectively wiped out among the ruling class and elite of the Eastern Empire. Valens died in the Battle of Adrianople in 378 and was succeeded by Theodosius I, who adhered to the Nicene Creed.[i] This allowed for settling the dispute. Theodosius's wife St Flacilla was instrumental in his campaign to end Arianism.[citation needed]

Two days after Theodosius arrived in Constantinople, 24 November 380, he expelled the Arian bishop, Demophilus of Constantinople, and surrendered the churches of that city to Gregory of Nazianzus, the Homoiousian leader of the rather small Nicene community there, an act which provoked rioting. Theodosius had just been baptized, by bishop Acholius of Thessalonica, during a severe illness, as was common in the early Christian world. In February he and Gratian had published an edict that all their subjects should profess the faith of the bishops of Rome and Alexandria (i.e., the Nicene faith),[90][91] or be handed over for punishment for not doing so.

Although much of the church hierarchy in the East had opposed the Nicene Creed in the decades leading up to Theodosius's accession, he managed to achieve unity on the basis of the Nicene Creed. In 381, at the Second Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, a group of mainly Eastern bishops assembled and accepted the Nicene Creed of 381,[92] which was supplemented in regard to the Holy Spirit, as well as some other changes: see Comparison of Nicene Creeds of 325 and 381. This is generally considered the end of the dispute about the Trinity and the end of Arianism among the Roman, non-Germanic peoples.[93]

Among medieval Germanic tribes

[edit]
The ceiling mosaic of the Arian Baptistery, built in Ravenna by the Ostrogothic King Theodoric the Great

During the time of Arianism's flowering in Constantinople, the Gothic convert and Arian bishop Ulfilas (later the subject of the letter of Auxentius cited above) was sent as a missionary to the Gothic tribes across the Danube, a mission favored for political reasons by the Emperor Constantius II. The Homoians in the Danubian provinces played a major role in the conversion of the Goths to Arianism.[94]

Ulfilas's translation of the Bible into Gothic language and his initial success in converting the Goths to Arianism was strengthened by later events. The conversion of Goths led to a widespread diffusion of Arianism among other Germanic tribes as well, the Vandals, Langobards, Svevi, and Burgundians.[7] When the Germanic peoples entered the provinces of the Western Roman Empire and began founding their own kingdoms there, most of them were Arian Christians.[7]

The conflict in the 4th century had seen Arian and Nicene factions struggling for control of Western Europe. In contrast, among the Arian German kingdoms established in the collapsing Western Empire in the 5th century, there existed entirely separate Arian and Nicene Churches with parallel hierarchies, each serving different sets of believers. The Germanic elites were Arians, and the Romance-majority population was Nicene.[95]

The Arian Germanic tribes were generally tolerant towards Nicene Christians and other religious minorities, including the Jews.[7]

The apparent resurgence of Arianism after Nicaea was more an anti-Nicene reaction exploited by Arian sympathizers than a pro-Arian development.[96] By the end of the 4th century, it had surrendered its remaining ground to Trinitarianism. In Western Europe, Arianism, which had been taught by Ulfilas, the Arian missionary to the Germanic tribes, was dominant among the Goths, Langobards and Vandals.[97] By the 8th century, it had ceased to be the tribes' mainstream belief as the tribal rulers gradually came to adopt Nicene orthodoxy. This trend began in 496 with Clovis I of the Franks, then Reccared I of the Visigoths in 587 and Aripert I of the Lombards in 653.[98][99]

The Franks and the Anglo-Saxons were unlike the other Germanic peoples in that they entered the Western Roman Empire as Pagans and were converted to Chalcedonian Christianity, led by their kings, Clovis I of the Franks, and Æthelberht of Kent and others in Britain.[100]

The remaining tribes – the Vandals and the Ostrogoths – did not convert as a people nor did they maintain territorial cohesion. Having been militarily defeated by the armies of Emperor Justinian I, the remnants were dispersed to the fringes of the empire and became lost to history. The Vandalic War of 533–534 dispersed the defeated Vandals.[101] Following their final defeat at the Battle of Mons Lactarius in 553, the Ostrogoths went back north and re-settled in south Austria.[citation needed]

From the 5th to the 7th century

[edit]
Arian and Chalcedonian kingdoms in 495

Much of south-eastern Europe and central Europe, including many of the Goths and Vandals respectively, had embraced Arianism (the Visigoths converted to Arian Christianity in 376 through their bishop Wulfila), which led to Arianism being a religious factor in various wars in the Roman Empire.[j]

In the west, organized Arianism survived in North Africa, in Hispania, and parts of Italy until it was suppressed in the 6th and 7th centuries. Visigothic Spain converted to Nicene Christianity through their king Reccared I at the Third Council of Toledo in 589.[103] Grimoald, King of the Lombards (662–671), and his young son and successor Garibald (671), were the last Arian kings in Europe.[104][105]

From the 16th to the 19th century

[edit]

Following the Protestant Reformation from 1517, it did not take long for Arian and other nontrinitarian views to resurface. The first recorded English antitrinitarian was John Assheton, who was forced to recant before Thomas Cranmer in 1548. At the Anabaptist Council of Venice 1550, the early Italian instigators of the Radical Reformation committed to the views of Michael Servetus—who was burned alive by the orders of John Calvin in 1553—were promulgated by Giorgio Biandrata and others into Poland and Transylvania.[106]

The anti-Trinitarian wing of the Polish Reformation separated from the Calvinist ecclesia maior to form the ecclesia minor or Polish Brethren. These were commonly referred to as "Arians" due to their rejection of the Trinity, though in fact the Socinians, as they were later known, went further than Arius to the position of Photinus. The epithet "Arian" was also applied to the early Unitarians such as John Biddle; though in denial of the pre-existence of Christ they were again largely Socinians, not Arians.[107]

In 1683, when Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, lay dying in Amsterdam—driven into exile by his outspoken opposition to King Charles II—he spoke to the minister Robert Ferguson, and professed himself an Arian.[108]

In the 18th century the "dominant trend" in Britain, particularly in Latitudinarianism, was toward Arianism, with which Samuel Clarke, Benjamin Hoadly, William Whiston and Isaac Newton are associated.[109] To quote the Encyclopædia Britannica's article on Arianism: "In modern times some Unitarians are virtually Arians in that they are unwilling either to reduce Christ to a mere human being or to attribute to him a divine nature identical with that of the Father."[110]

Today

[edit]

The teachings of the first two ecumenical councils that entirely reject Arianism are held by: the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox Churches, the Assyrian Church of the East; almost all historic Protestant churches including Lutheran, Reformed, Presbyterian, Continental Reformed, Congregationalist, Anglican, Methodist, Baptist, and Free Evangelical; all entirely reject the teachings associated with Arianism.

Modern groups that currently appear to embrace some of the principles of Arianism include Unitarians and Jehovah's Witnesses. Although the origins of their beliefs are not necessarily attributed to the teachings of Arius, many of the core beliefs of Unitarians and Jehovah's Witnesses are very similar to them.[111][112][113]

Jehovah's Witnesses

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Jehovah's Witnesses are often referred to as "modern-day Arians",[114][115] usually by their opponents,[116][117][118] although Jehovah's Witnesses themselves have denied these claims.[119] Significant similarities in doctrine include the identification of the Father as the only true God and of Jesus Christ as the first creation of God and the intermediate agent in the creation of all other things. They also deny the personhood of the Holy Spirit, which some Arians historically affirmed. Jehovah's Witnesses exclusively worship and pray to God the Father, or Jehovah, only through Jesus (the Son) as a mediator.[119][120]

Iglesia ni Cristo

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Iglesia ni Cristo's Christology has parallels with Arianism in that it affirms that the Father is the only true God, but it denies the preexistence of Christ. Thus, Iglesia ni Cristo is Socinian rather than Arian in its Christology.[121]

Other Socinian groups

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Other Biblical Unitarians such as the Christadelphians[122] and Church of God General Conference[123] are also typically Socinian rather than Arian in their Christology.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) teaches a nontrinitarian theology concerning the nature of the Godhead. Similarities between LDS doctrines and Arianism were alleged as early as 1846.[124] There are a number of key differences between Arianism and Latter-day Saint theology. Whereas Arianism is a unitarian Christian form of classical theism, Latter-day Saint theology is a non-trinitarian (but not unitarian) form of Christianity outside of classical theism. Arianism also teaches that God is eternal, was never a man, and could not incarnate as a man; in contrast, the LDS Church teaches that "God Himself is an exalted man, perfected, enthroned, and supreme."[125]

Whereas Arianism denies that humans can become gods, the LDS Church affirms that humans can become gods through exaltation.[126] Whereas Arianism teaches that the Son was created, the LDS Church also teaches that the Son was procreated as a literal spirit child of the Heavenly Father and the Heavenly Mother[127] and denies any form of creation ex nihilo; the creation of Christ ex nihilo is, in contrast, a fundamental premise of Arianism.[128]

The LDS church, in contrast to the Arian teaching that God is incorporeal, also teaches that God has a tangible body: "The Father has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's; the Son also; but the Holy Ghost has not a body of flesh and bones, but is a personage of Spirit. Were it not so, the Holy Ghost could not dwell in us."[129] Arianism traditionally taught that God is incomprehensible even to the Son. In contrast, the LDS Church rejects the doctrine that God is incomprehensible.[130] Though Arianism teaches that Christ is ontologically inferior and subordinate to the Father, the LDS Church teaches that Christ is equal in power and glory with the Father.

The LDS Church teaches that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three separate beings united in purpose: "the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit (or Holy Ghost) [...] are three physically separate beings, but fully one in love, purpose and will",[131] as illustrated in Jesus' Farewell Prayer, his baptism at the hands of John the Baptist, his transfiguration, and the martyrdom of Stephen.[132] Thus, the church's first Article of Faith states: "We believe in God, the Eternal Father, and in His Son, Jesus Christ, and in the Holy Ghost."[133]

Latter-day Saints believe that the three are collectively "one eternal God"[134] but reject the Nicene definition of the Trinity, that the three are consubstantial.[130] In some respects, Latter-day Saint theology is more similar to social trinitarianism than to Arianism.

Spiritism

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According to the reincarnationist religion of Spiritism started by French educator Allan Kardec in the 19th century, Jesus is the highest-order of spirit that has ever incarnated on Earth and is distinct from God, by whom he was created. Jesus is not considered God or part of God as in Nicene Christianity, but is nonetheless the ultimate model of human love, intelligence, and forgiveness,[135] often cited as the governor of Earth.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Arianism was a Christological doctrine formulated by , a presbyter in around 250–336 AD, asserting that the was created by the Father ex nihilo before all ages, thereby possessing a beginning in time and a subordinate nature distinct from the Father's uncreated essence. This position, rooted in scriptural interpretations emphasizing the Father's uniqueness and the Son's generation through divine will, rejected the coeternity and consubstantiality of Father and Son to preserve strict . The teachings ignited a profound theological crisis in the early Church, prompting Emperor Constantine I to convene the in 325 AD, where was condemned and the proclaimed the Son as homoousios (of the same substance) with the Father. Despite this and subsequent imperial edicts enforcing , Arianism gained traction among through missionaries like , influencing kingdoms such as the and until their gradual shift to in the late 6th and 7th centuries. The controversy underscored enduring tensions in Trinitarian formulation, with "Arianism" often broadly labeling diverse subordinationist views, though Arius's precise theology centered on the Son's exalted creaturehood rather than .

Core Doctrine and Theology

Fundamental Beliefs

Arianism maintained that is the sole unbegotten, eternal, and immutable source of all existence, possessing attributes such as and exclusively. The Son, identified as Jesus Christ, was begotten by the Father ex nihilo as the first and highest creation before the ages, through whom the Father created the universe, but the Son possesses a beginning and was not co-eternal with the Father. This is encapsulated in ' assertion, preserved in his Thalia, that "the Son was not always" and "once He was not," emphasizing that God was not eternally a Father but became one through the act of begetting the Son. The Son's divinity derives by participation in the Father's grace rather than inherent equality of essence (ousia), rendering the Son subordinate and distinct, not sharing the Father's unoriginate nature. explicitly rejected the notion of the Son as "very " in the same sense as the Father, describing Him instead as "called " but created "" like other works, albeit preeminent among them. In his letter to Alexander of Alexandria around 321 CE, clarified that the Son "has a beginning" and "before he was begotten... he did not exist," countering claims of co-eternity while affirming the Son's role as "perfect , only-begotten and unbegotten" in a derived sense, subject to the Father. This preserved strict by avoiding any implication of multiple unbegotten deities. Regarding the Holy Spirit, Arian theology positioned it as subordinate to the Son, often viewing it as a created entity or force emanating from the Son rather than coequal or consubstantial with the Father and Son. This triadic framework rejected Nicene homoousios (same substance) for the three persons, favoring hierarchical distinctions to align with scriptural passages like Proverbs 8:22, where (identified with the Son) is "created" or "possessed" by God at the beginning of His works. Arians argued such views better reflected the Father's unique transcendence, as evidenced by John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), without compromising the Son's instrumental role in creation and .

Scriptural and Philosophical Foundations

Arius grounded his theology in a literal reading of scriptural texts that highlighted distinctions between and the Son, interpreting them to affirm the Father's sole eternity and the Son's derivation from Him. A key passage was Proverbs 8:22, where personified states, "The Lord possessed me at the beginning of his work, the first of his acts of old," which Arius equated with Christ as the and understood as evidence of the Son's creation by the Father prior to the world's formation. Similarly, he invoked John 14:28—"the Father is greater than I"—to underscore the Son's subordination in essence and authority, rejecting any co-equality that might imply division within God's unity. Other verses, such as Colossians 1:15 describing Christ as "the firstborn of all creation" and Revelation 3:14 naming Him "the beginning of God's creation," reinforced Arius's view of the Son as the first and highest creature, generated ex nihilo by the Father for the purpose of creation and redemption. These interpretations prioritized passages emphasizing hierarchy and origination over those suggesting unity or divine attributes of the Son, such as John 1:1 or Philippians 2:6, which Arius reconciled by positing the Son's exalted but created status—impassible and worthy of worship, yet not self-existent like the . Arians maintained that such a reading preserved biblical , avoiding the risk of inherent in equating the persons ontologically. Philosophically, Arianism reflected a commitment to causal realism in divine , insisting on the Father's unbegotten transcendence to avert any implication of composition or change in , influences traceable to broader Hellenistic concerns with an immutable . While critics like Athanasius accused Arius of subordinating scripture to , Arius framed his position as scriptural fidelity against speculative equalization, echoing earlier subordinationist tendencies in figures like without fully adopting Platonic . This approach aligned with a strict causal hierarchy: the Son as instrumental cause of creation, dependent on the Father's efficient , thereby upholding God's absolute simplicity and avoiding the philosophical paradoxes of multiple eternal essences.

Soteriological Implications

In Arian theology, the Son functions as the preeminent creature and mediator whose perfect obedience to the Father secures salvation for humanity. As a being created ex nihilo yet exalted through unwavering submission, the Son's voluntary incarnation, suffering, and death exemplify moral progress achievable by creatures, enabling believers to imitate this pattern and attain adoptive sonship via divine grace. This soteriology prioritizes the Son's role as an ethical vanguard, bridging the gap between God and creation without requiring shared divine essence, thus emphasizing free moral agency and transformative effort over inherent ontological participation in divinity. The implications underscore a view of atonement centered on recapitulation and vicarious obedience rather than infinite satisfaction of divine justice. Arians contended that the Father's appointment of the Son as agent preserved monotheism while rendering salvation accessible, as a fully divine Savior could not authentically suffer or serve as relatable model for human redemption from moral corruption. Believers, empowered by the Son's precedent, advance toward deification not as sharing uncreated nature but as rewarded creatures mirroring his fidelity, fostering a soteriology of moral ascent and conditional exaltation. Nicene proponents, including , critiqued this framework as insufficient, asserting that only a consubstantial could conquer and sin's cosmic effects, since a creature's merits—however exemplary—cannot impart eternal life or redeem from eternal penalty. Arian atonement, they argued, reduces to finite moral exchange, undermining its efficacy against humanity's infinite offense against the Creator. This divergence fueled , with Arians viewing Nicene homoousios as compromising the Father's unique sovereignty essential for genuine creaturely .

Historical Origins

Arius and Early Alexandrian Context

, born circa 250 AD in (modern ), emerged as a prominent in Alexandria's Baucalis church district by the early . Renowned for his ascetic discipline, sharp intellect, and proficiency in dialectical reasoning, he initially advanced within the ecclesiastical hierarchy under Bishop , who died in 313 AD. Arius's scriptural expositions attracted a devoted following among and some , positioning him as an influential teacher in a city teeming with theological inquiry. Alexandria stood as a pivotal hub of , boasting the Catechetical School founded around 180 AD, which cultivated luminaries like Pantaenus, Clement (c. 150–215 AD), and (c. 185–254 AD). This institution emphasized allegorical biblical interpretation and integrated , notably and , into Christian doctrine, sparking intense debates on Trinitarian relations and Christ's divinity. Subordinationist tendencies—viewing the Son as derivative from the Father—prevailed in varying degrees, yet the precise of the Son's generation remained contested, setting the stage for Arius's interventions. The rift with Bishop Alexander, who succeeded Achillas in 313 AD, crystallized around 318–320 AD during presbyteral discussions on the Trinity. Arius critiqued Alexander's affirmation of the Son's eternal co-existence with the Father, insisting from texts like Proverbs 8:22 that the Logos was begotten "before all ages" yet created ex nihilo, implying a temporal origin: "There was [a time] when he was not." Alexander, perceiving this as undermining divine unity, summoned councils; by circa 321 AD, Arius's refusal to recant led to his excommunication alongside up to 89 supporting clerics, though his ideas resonated widely, prompting appeals to bishops like Eusebius of Nicomedia. This local schism exposed fault lines in Alexandrian theology, where scriptural literalism clashed with philosophical commitments to immutability and monarchy.

Initial Spread and Key Proponents

Arius's teachings gained traction beyond through his presbyterial associates and epistolary outreach to sympathetic bishops across the , particularly in and Asia Minor, where subordinationist Christological views had precedents in ante-Nicene theology. By approximately 320 CE, these efforts had drawn endorsements from figures such as Theognis of and Maris of , amplifying the controversy empire-wide and prompting synodal responses in Antioch and . Eusebius of Nicomedia emerged as the principal organizer of Arian sympathizers, leveraging his episcopal influence and familial ties to Emperor Constantine to advocate for Arius's rehabilitation after his 321 CE excommunication. As bishop of a key ecclesiastical see near the imperial court, Eusebius convened councils, such as the 325 CE Bithynian , to align bishops against Nicene formulations and secure Arius's partial vindication prior to the Council of Nicaea. Asterius the Sophist, an early defender of Arian , contributed intellectual rigor through treatises like the Syntagmation, which argued for the Son's derivative nature from scriptural exegesis and philosophical reasoning, influencing and subsequent proponents. Athanasius later accused Asterius of doctrinal mimicry in Arian circles, underscoring his role in framing the as biblically grounded rather than innovative. Eusebius of Caesarea, while not strictly Arian, provided tentative support through historical writings that echoed subordinationist themes, aiding the spread by portraying Arius's views as continuous with earlier like . This of bishops and theologians propelled Arianism's initial dissemination, garnering majority Eastern episcopal backing by 325 CE and challenging centralized Alexandrian .

Ecclesiastical and Imperial Conflicts

Prelude and Council of Nicaea (325 CE)

The originated in , , around 319 CE, when , influenced by earlier theological speculations, publicly asserted that the , Christ, was created by the from nothing and therefore had a beginning in time, rejecting the notion of eternal co-existence. This view stemmed from Arius's interpretation of scriptures such as Proverbs 8:22 and John 14:28, emphasizing a hierarchical subordination where the Son derived existence from the Father but was not of the same divine essence. of , alarmed by these teachings as undermining Christ's full , convened local synods and demanded Arius recant, leading to Arius's in 321 CE after he refused to affirm the Son's eternal generation. Arius, supported by allies like , disseminated his doctrines through letters, theological poems set to popular tunes, and appeals to bishops across the East, sparking widespread division that threatened ecclesiastical unity. Emperor Constantine I, recently victorious and favoring for imperial stability after his conversion around 312 CE, viewed the escalating dispute as a peril to the empire's cohesion, prompting him to intervene decisively. In 325 CE, Constantine summoned approximately 300 bishops, primarily from the Eastern provinces, to the Council of Nicaea in (modern İznik, Turkey), covering travel and subsistence costs to ensure broad representation. The assembly, opening on June 19, 325 CE, debated the controversy intensely; Arius presented his case, but the majority, influenced by figures like Athanasius (then a deacon under Alexander), rejected his subordinationism as heretical. The council promulgated the Nicene Creed, explicitly affirming that the Son is "begotten, not made, of one substance [homoousios] with the Father," directly countering Arian claims of the Son's created status and incorporating anti-Arian anathemas. Arius and select supporters, including Theonas of Marmarica and Secundus of Ptolemais, were condemned, excommunicated, and exiled, with orders to burn Arian writings to suppress further propagation. Constantine, initially tolerant but ultimately endorsing the orthodox position for unity, enforced the decisions, though the creed's use of homoousios—drawn from philosophical terminology—later fueled semi-Arian compromises. This outcome marked the first ecumenical council's effort to define Trinitarian orthodoxy against subordinationist views, setting a precedent for imperial involvement in doctrinal matters.

Post-Nicaea Struggles and Council of Constantinople (381 CE)

Following the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, which condemned and affirmed the Son's consubstantiality (homoousios) with the Father, Arian and semi-Arian factions persisted through imperial patronage and regional synods that avoided or rejected Nicene terminology. Emperor Constantius II, ruling the East from 337 to 361 CE, actively supported homoian formulas emphasizing the Son's likeness (homoios) to the Father without homoousios, convening councils to depose Nicene bishops. Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria and leading Nicene advocate, faced multiple exiles under Constantius, including from 339 to 346 CE (over seven years in Rome) and again from 356 to 361 CE after the Council of Milan. Key synods amplified Arian influence: the Council of Antioch in 341 CE, attended by over 90 bishops, issued creeds rejecting homoousios and confirmed Athanasius's deposition; the divided Council of Serdica in 343 CE saw Western bishops uphold Nicaea while Eastern counterparts at Philippopolis endorsed Arian-leaning decrees; the Council of Milan in 355 CE enforced similar condemnations; and the twin councils of Rimini (over 400 Western bishops) and Seleucia (160 Eastern) in 359 CE, under Constantius's pressure, led most attendees to subscribe to a homoian creed, though divisions persisted. These assemblies, often manipulated by Arian leaders like Acacius of Caesarea and Eudoxius of Antioch, temporarily marginalized Nicene orthodoxy in both East and West, with Constantius's death in 361 CE marking a brief respite under Julian the Apostate's toleration policy. The Eastern emperor Valens (364–378 CE) continued Arian support, but his defeat and death at the Battle of Adrianople in 378 CE shifted momentum toward Nicene restoration under Theodosius I, who ascended in 379 CE as a committed Nicene after baptism in 380 CE. On February 27, 380 CE, Theodosius, with Western co-emperors Gratian and Valentinian II, issued the Edict of Thessalonica, declaring Nicene Christianity the empire's official faith and condemning Arian doctrines as heretical, threatening divine and imperial penalties for dissenters. The First Council of Constantinople, convened by Theodosius in May 381 CE with approximately 150 Eastern bishops, ratified the , anathematized Arian variants (including Anomoeans, Arians proper, and semi-Arians), and expanded the creed to affirm the Holy Spirit's divinity against Pneumatomachi, effectively sidelining Arian theology within the Roman Empire's core. Gregory of Nazianzus briefly presided before resigning amid disputes, succeeded by Nectarius of Constantinople; the council's first canon explicitly reaffirmed Nicaea's faith against Arian heresies, with Theodosius ratifying the decrees on July 30, 381 CE, enforcing orthodoxy through state mechanisms. This assembly, lacking significant Western participation, prioritized Eastern reconciliation but decisively curtailed imperial-backed Arianism, though pockets endured among Germanic groups.

Role of Roman Emperors in Enforcement

Roman emperors following Constantine I increasingly viewed ecclesiastical unity as essential to imperial stability, leveraging their authority to enforce doctrinal conformity through councils, exiles, and legislation during the Arian controversies. (r. 337–361 CE), favoring semi-Arian positions, systematically advanced Arian-sympathizing clergy while suppressing Nicene leaders, including multiple exiles of for rejecting imperial creeds. He orchestrated councils such as Milan in 355 CE and Rimini-Seleucia in 359 CE to promote a Homoian formula that avoided the Nicene homoousios term, compelling bishops to subscribe under threat of deposition. Emperor Valens (r. 364–378 CE), a committed Homoean Arian ruling the East, intensified enforcement against Nicene Christians, resorting to exile, confiscation of churches, and violent persecutions, including burning orthodox clergy in a ship as recounted in historical accounts of his reign. These measures aimed to consolidate Arian dominance but provoked widespread resistance. The tide turned under (r. 379–395 CE), who, after his baptism in 380 CE, issued the on February 27, 380 CE—co-authored with Gratian and Valentinian II—declaring adherence to the the sole orthodox faith and authorizing penalties against heretics, including Arians. This edict expelled Arian bishop Demophilus from on November 24, 380 CE, and facilitated the in 381 CE, which reaffirmed Nicene doctrine and condemned Arian variants. Theodosius's decrees effectively marginalized Arianism within imperial territories, establishing Nicene Christianity as the enforced state religion.

Adoption and Dominance

Penetration into the Roman Empire

Despite the condemnation of Arianism at the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, the doctrine penetrated the Roman Empire through a combination of theological resurgence among clergy and decisive imperial patronage in the Eastern provinces. Emperor Constantine I's death in 337 CE divided the empire among his sons, with Constantius II assuming control of the East and favoring Arian-leaning bishops such as Eusebius of Nicomedia, who had baptized the emperor shortly before his own death. Constantius II, a committed Arian sympathizer, systematically appointed homoian and semi-Arian prelates to key sees, including Antioch and thereby embedding subordinationist Christology in ecclesiastical structures. This imperial endorsement facilitated Arianism's spread via synods convened under Constantius's auspices, which produced creeds diluting or rejecting the Nicene homoousios. The Eastern-oriented Council of Antioch in 341 CE issued a formula affirming the Son's likeness to the Father without specifying essence, while the Second Council of Sirmium in 351 CE explicitly condemned ousia language as unscriptural, attracting over 300 bishops. Subsequent Sirmium assemblies in 357 CE advanced stricter homoian positions, and parallel councils at Ariminum (Rimini) in the West and Seleucia in the East in 359 CE—attended by roughly 400 and 170 bishops respectively—endorsed formulations that the Son was "like" the Father, effectively sidelining Nicene orthodoxy across imperial territories. These gatherings, backed by imperial coercion including exile for dissenters like Athanasius, entrenched Arianism in Eastern synodal practice and liturgy by the mid-fourth century. Emperor Valens (r. 364–378 CE), succeeding in the East, continued this trajectory by suppressing Nicene communities in Asia Minor and where Arian bishops dominated urban centers and military chapels, extending influence to provincial administrations. Penetration into the Western Empire remained shallower, confined largely to court circles and frontier garrisons, as emperors like Constans I (r. 337–350 CE) upheld Nicene leanings until Constantius's brief unification in 353–361 CE imposed Eastern Arian models temporarily. By the 370s CE, Arianism held sway over the majority of Eastern bishoprics, with estimates suggesting over two-thirds of imperial clergy in the East aligned with homoian variants, though persistent Nicene resistance in Egypt and Illyricum limited full consolidation. This dominance relied on state enforcement rather than grassroots appeal, as Arianism's rationalistic subordination of the Son resonated in philosophical circles but faced scriptural pushback from Nicene interpreters.

Establishment Among Germanic Tribes

Arianism took root among the Germanic tribes starting with the Goths in the 340s CE, largely through the missionary work of Ulfilas, a bishop of Gothic descent consecrated around 340–341 CE by the Arian leader Eusebius of Nicomedia. Ulfilas led evangelization efforts among the Thervingian Goths (precursors to the Visigoths) north of the Danube River, translating significant portions of the Bible into the Gothic language using an alphabet he devised, which enabled widespread dissemination of Arian teachings emphasizing Christ's subordination to God the Father. This conversion occurred during a period of Arian influence in the Eastern Roman Empire, where non-Nicene missionaries predominated, shaping the theological framework imparted to the tribes. The Ostrogoths, eastern kin of the Visigoths, similarly adopted Arianism through shared Gothic traditions and subsequent missionary contacts, maintaining it under leaders like (r. 493–526 CE), who established an Arian kingdom in Italy. Arianism then extended to other tribes, including the , who embraced it prior to their 429 CE migration to North Africa, where King Geiseric (r. 428–477 CE) enforced Arian practices among his people while tolerating Nicene Romans, using the doctrine to underscore ethnic and hierarchical distinctions. The (or Suevi) converted around the mid-5th century under King Rechila or Rechismund, aligning with Arian Goths in Iberia, while the adopted it through interactions with Arian Huns and Goths in the late 4th to early 5th centuries. This preference for Arianism over Nicene Christianity among Germanic elites derived from its alignment with tribal social structures, where the subordinationist Christology mirrored kingly authority over subjects without implying doctrinal equality with Roman populations, facilitating rule over conquered territories. Missionaries like Ulfilas, operating amid Eastern imperial Arian sympathies post-Constantius II (r. 337–361 CE), transmitted Homoian variants that avoided Trinitarian complexities deemed esoteric, resonating with practical warrior cultures. Primary evidence includes surviving Gothic Bible fragments and Arian ecclesiastical structures, such as baptisteries in Ostrogothic Ravenna, attesting to institutional embedding.

Extensions to Other Peoples and Regions

Arianism extended beyond the core Germanic tribal heartlands primarily through the migration and conquests of Arian-confessing groups, establishing footholds in peripheral Roman provinces where it functioned as the religion of ruling minorities amid largely Nicene subject populations. In North Africa, the Vandals, under King Genseric, captured Carthage in 439 CE and imposed Arianism as the state faith, confiscating Nicene churches and exiling bishops such as Quodvultdeus of Carthage while elevating Arian clergy. This policy created sharp divisions, as the native Romano-African and Berber communities, steeped in Nicene orthodoxy, offered resistance through figures like Victor of Vita, who documented Vandal persecutions in his History of the Vandal Persecution (ca. 484 CE); widespread conversion among non-Vandals remained negligible, with Arianism confined mostly to the Germanic elite and their clients until the Byzantine reconquest in 533–534 CE under Belisarius. Later Vandal rulers like Hilderic (r. 523–530 CE) eased restrictions, allowing some Catholic restoration, but the faith's regional grip eroded without deep indigenous roots. In the Italian peninsula, Ostrogothic King Theodoric (r. 493–526 CE) extended Arian influence following his conquest from Odoacer, maintaining separate Arian ecclesiastical structures—including the Arian Baptistery in Ravenna—while granting relative tolerance to the Roman Nicene majority to preserve administrative stability. Theodoric's regime avoided aggressive proselytism among Italo-Romans, focusing Arian practice on Gothic settlers and warriors, though tensions surfaced in disputes over church properties; this pragmatic separation limited Arianism's penetration into the broader Latin population, which remained predominantly orthodox, contributing to its marginalization after Justinian's Gothic War (535–554 CE). Further west, Arian Germanic groups like the Suebi and Visigoths carried the doctrine into Hispania, with the Suebi establishing an Arian kingdom in Gallaecia (northwest Iberia) around 409 CE, where it persisted among elites until King Theodemir's conversion to Nicene Christianity in 561 CE. The Visigoths, dominating much of the peninsula by the mid-5th century, similarly upheld Arianism under kings like Leovigild (r. 568–586 CE), who attempted forced conversions of Hispano-Roman Catholics but met doctrinal resistance; full transition to Nicene orthodoxy occurred only under Reccared I at the Third Council of Toledo in 589 CE, marking the faith's effective end in the region amid limited uptake by local Suebic or Iberian populations. These extensions thus represented elite impositions rather than organic diffusion to non-Germanic groups, constrained by theological barriers and the numerical superiority of Nicene communities.

Decline and Marginalization

Conversion of Arian Rulers and Kingdoms

The conversion of Arian rulers to often triggered the official abandonment of Arianism by their kingdoms, driven by dynastic alliances, missionary influence, and geopolitical pressures from Catholic powers like the and Byzantines. These shifts typically involved royal professions of faith, ecclesiastical councils to enforce orthodoxy, and suppression of Arian clergy and rituals, leading to rapid assimilation in some cases but lingering resistance in others. In the Burgundian kingdom, King Sigismund succeeded his Arian father Gundobad in 516 after having personally converted to Nicene Christianity before 514. Sigismund's reign marked the kingdom's transition, as he founded the monastery of Saint-Maurice d'Agaune in 515 and supported Nicene bishops, though Arian elements persisted among the nobility until Frankish conquests in the 530s accelerated orthodoxy. The Suebi kingdom in Gallaecia underwent conversion in the mid-6th century through the efforts of Martin of Braga, who arrived around 550 and converted King Miro and the Suebi elite from . This culminated in the First Council of Braga in 561, the first post-conversion synod, where canons addressed remnants of Suebi paganism and Arian practices while affirming Nicene doctrine among the 72 bishops present. The royal endorsement facilitated widespread adoption, predating similar Visigothic changes by decades. King Reccared I of the Visigoths, ruling from 586, renounced around 587 under influence from Catholic advisors like and converted his kingdom through the in May 589. At the council, attended by 62 bishops, Reccared publicly professed the , anathematized , and ordered the destruction of Arian churches, binding Hispania's Visigothic realm to orthodoxy and enabling legislative unification with the Roman population. For the Vandal kingdom, no pre-conquest royal conversion occurred; instead, Byzantine general Belisarius's victory in 534 ended Arian dominance, with King Gelimer captured and elites deported to Anatolia or Asia Minor, where many assimilated into Nicene society. Under Justinian's , Arian clergy were expelled, Vandal lands confiscated, and Nicene bishops restored, transforming the region into an orthodox province by the late 530s despite sporadic resistance. The Ostrogothic kingdom's fall after the Gothic War (535–554) similarly prompted conversions without a unified royal figure, as survivors under in Italy faced rebaptism mandates and property seizures for Arians. Post-554, Nicene clergy reoccupied sees, and Ostrogothic remnants, diminished by war losses exceeding 100,000, gradually adopted orthodoxy amid Roman repopulation and imperial enforcement. Among the Lombards, who invaded Italy as Arians in 568, conversion progressed unevenly through Catholic queens like Theudelinda, who influenced her husband (r. 590–616) toward toleration, but the decisive shift came under King Perctarit (r. 661–688), the first explicitly Catholic monarch, who suppressed Arianism by the 670s. This royal pivot, reinforced by , integrated Lombards with the Nicene majority, though Arian holdouts lingered into the 8th century until in 774.

Theological Counterarguments and Refutations

Athanasius of Alexandria, in his Orations Against the Arians composed around 339–345 CE, systematically refuted Arian claims by arguing that the Son's role as creator, as described in Proverbs 8:22–31 and Colossians 1:15–17, precludes any notion of the Son being a created being, since a creature cannot create ex nihilo. He contended that Arian interpretations of "begotten" as implying temporal origin misconstrue scriptural language, which uses "begotten" to denote eternal generation from the Father's essence, not a point of beginning, drawing on where the Word is both with God and is God, active in creation. Athanasius emphasized that denying the Son's co-eternality introduces a duality of gods, with the Son as a subordinate demiurge, which fragments divine unity and echoes pagan polytheism rather than biblical monotheism. A core soteriological refutation, advanced by Athanasius and echoed at the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, held that human salvation requires a fully divine redeemer, as only God can overcome death and sin; a created Son, per Arianism, lacks the infinite merit to atone for humanity's infinite offense against God, rendering the incarnation ineffective for deification (theosis). This argument rested on Romans 5:19 and Hebrews 2:14–17, where Christ's obedience and death conquer sin precisely because he is God incarnate, not a exalted creature; Athanasius illustrated this by noting that if the Son were mutable or lesser, his victory over corruption would be partial, leaving believers unsubdued by death. The Cappadocian Fathers, including Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa in works from the 370s CE, countered Arian subordinationism by clarifying the homoousios (same substance) doctrine from Nicaea, arguing that the Son's consubstantiality with the Father preserves the monarchy of the Father while affirming perichoresis (mutual indwelling) among the persons, avoiding both modalism and Arian hierarchy. They refuted Arian use of texts like John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I") as referring to the incarnate economy, not eternal ontology, citing Philippians 2:6–11 where the Son, equal in form with God, empties himself temporarily without ontological change. Gregory of Nyssa, in Against Eunomius (c. 380 CE), exposed logical flaws in Arian claims of the Son's "unlike" essence (anomoios), asserting that divine incomprehensibility demands eternal relations within the Godhead, not sequential generation, as any "before" the Son implies composition in God, contradicting immutability in Malachi 3:6. Hilary of Poitiers, in On the Trinity (c. 356–360 CE), further dismantled Arianism by appealing to worship texts: the Son receives latreia (divine worship) in Matthew 14:33 and Hebrews 1:6, which scripture reserves solely for God (Exodus 20:5), proving co-divinity; to attribute this to a creature elevates idolatry. These refutations collectively underscored that Arianism's temporal subordination undermines scriptural attributions of eternity, omnipotence, and salvific efficacy to the Son, such as Isaiah 9:6's "Mighty God" and Revelation 1:8's alpha-omega applied to Christ in Revelation 22:13. By the Council of Constantinople in 381 CE, these arguments solidified the 's formulation, marginalizing Arian exegesis as selective and philosophically incoherent, reliant on Greek categories of emanation over biblical personalism.

Cultural and Institutional Factors

The cultural association of Arianism with Germanic barbarian migrations positioned it as a marker of ethnic otherness amid the Romanized Christian populations of the late antique West. Germanic rulers, such as the Visigoths and Vandals, adopted Arianism as a distinct faith from the Nicene Catholicism of their Roman subjects, which reinforced social segregation and limited intermarriage with local elites who adhered to the imperial creed. This ethnic exclusivity became a liability as kingdoms sought cultural assimilation and political legitimacy; for example, the Ostrogothic kingdom in Italy under Theodoric (r. 493–526 CE) tolerated Nicene worship but maintained Arian separation, yet post-reconquest by Justinian's forces in 535–554 CE, Arian institutions were suppressed to foster unity under Byzantine Nicene orthodoxy. Similarly, Vandal persecutions of Catholics in North Africa alienated the majority population, contributing to resentment that persisted until the kingdom's fall in 534 CE. Institutionally, Arianism suffered from underdeveloped ecclesiastical structures compared to the Nicene Church's entrenched episcopal hierarchies, which were woven into Roman civic administration and urban life. Arian bishops among Germanic groups were typically royal appointees serving ethnic minorities, lacking the autonomous networks of monasteries, schools, and popular cults that sustained Nicene resilience. The exclusionary policies following the Council of Constantinople in 381 CE, which barred non-Nicene groups from state churches and offices under Theodosius I, stripped Arians of legal standing and property in the East, while in the West, parallel Arian hierarchies proved brittle without imperial backing. The conversion of Frankish king Clovis I circa 496 CE, followed by alliances with Catholic bishops, shifted momentum, as Frankish military dominance pressured Arian rulers like the Visigoths to convert at the Third Council of Toledo in 589 CE under Reccared I, dissolving Arian sees into the Catholic framework. These factors compounded as Arianism's linkage to transient warrior elites waned with the stabilization of post-Roman kingdoms, where Nicene Catholicism offered a unifying cultural idiom for governance and identity. The heresy’s marginalization reflected not mere theological rejection but the pragmatic incentives of institutional integration and cultural homogenization, rendering Arian communities unsustainable by the mid-6th century in most regions.

Controversies and Debates

Arguments Supporting Arian Subordinationism

Arian subordinationism posits that the Son (Jesus Christ) is divine yet ontologically subordinate to the Father, deriving his existence from the Father through creation or begetting prior to all other things, thereby preserving the Father's unique unbegotten eternity. Proponents, including Arius, argued from scriptural texts emphasizing the Son's dependence and inferiority to the Father. For instance, John 14:28 states, "the Father is greater than I," interpreted as evidence of inherent inequality rather than mere functional role in the economy of salvation. Similarly, Colossians 1:15 describes the Son as "the firstborn of all creation," suggesting a primacy among created beings but not co-eternality with the uncreated Father. Further biblical support drew from Proverbs 8:22, personified Wisdom (equated with the Son) declaring, "The Lord created me at the beginning of his work," implying the Son's origin before the world's formation yet after the Father's eternal existence. Arians also referenced passages depicting the Son's prayers to the Father (e.g., John 17:3, where the Father is "the only true God") and his cry of abandonment on the cross (Matthew 27:46), as indications of real dependence and distinction from the Father's self-sufficiency. These texts, Arius contended, preclude the Son sharing the Father's ingenerate nature, as sonship entails derivation by the Father's will. Theologically, subordinationism upheld divine simplicity and immutability by rejecting eternal generation as implying division or temporal process within God. Arius argued in his letter to Eusebius that the Son's begetting was an act of the Father's , establishing a "beginning of things" in the Son, thus avoiding any composition in the divine essence or risk of polytheism from co-equal persons. This preserved strict monotheism, with the Father as sole unoriginate source (monarchia), the Son as exalted intermediary through whom creation occurs, subordinate in essence yet instrumental in revelation and redemption. Such reasoning aligned with philosophical concerns from Platonist influences in early Christianity, prioritizing an unchanging, singular divine principle over relational equality that might suggest multiplicity.

Criticisms from Nicene Perspectives

Nicene theologians, particularly in his Orations Against the Arians (circa 339–345 CE), contended that Arian subordinationism rendered Christian salvation incoherent by positing the Son as a created intermediary rather than eternally divine, arguing that only a fully divine Savior could effect deification of humanity, as mere creatures cannot impart divine life. This critique emphasized that Arian views reduced the Son to an exalted creature, incapable of bridging the ontological gap between Creator and creation, thereby nullifying the redemptive efficacy of the . Scripturally, Nicene defenders refuted Arian interpretations of passages like Proverbs 8:22 ("The Lord created me at the beginning of his work") by asserting these referred to the Son's economic role in creation, not ontological origin, while citing John 1:1–3 ("In the beginning was the Word... all things were made through him") to affirm the Son's preexistence and co-divinity with the Father. Similarly, Colossians 1:15–17 describes the Son as "the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation" yet the agent through whom "all things were created," countering Arian claims of temporal generation by highlighting eternal agency in creation. Hebrews 1:2–3 further portrays the Son as the "radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature," underscoring consubstantiality (homoousios) rather than subordination. Philosophically, Athanasius argued that Arianism implied a time when the Son did not exist, contradicting divine immutability and eternity, as begottenness must be timeless to avoid introducing composition or change into God's simple essence. This position, they claimed, veered toward polytheism by positing two unequal principles or ditheism, whereas Nicene homoousios preserved monotheism through shared substance while allowing functional distinctions. Critics like Hilary of Poitiers (circa 367 CE) reinforced this by noting that subordinationism undermined worship of the Son (e.g., Philippians 2:10–11), as adoration belongs to God alone, not creatures.

Historiographical Biases and Reassessments

Historiographical accounts of Arianism have been predominantly shaped by Nicene orthodox sources, which portrayed Arius and his followers as theological innovators introducing radical subordinationism alien to This perspective, advanced by figures like Athanasius of Alexandria, emphasized Arius's alleged denial of Christ's divinity to justify condemnations at councils such as Nicaea in 325 CE, often exaggerating the uniformity and extremity of Arian views to consolidate imperial and ecclesiastical support for homoousianism. The scarcity of surviving Arian texts—due in part to deliberate suppressions, including book burnings ordered by Emperor Constantine around 333 CE—further skewed reconstructions, as most knowledge derives from polemical quotations by opponents rather than primary Arian writings. Such biases reflect the victors' narrative in early Christian polemics, where orthodox historians like Epiphanius and Theodoret depicted Arius personally as morally suspect and doctrinally deviant, a portrayal that persisted in patristic and medieval scholarship with little critical distance. Church-dominated historiography, particularly in Catholic and Orthodox traditions, reinforced Arianism's status as archetypal heresy, minimizing its scriptural and philosophical appeals—such as strict monotheism and avoidance of perceived modalistic excesses in Trinitarian formulations—that attracted converts among Germanic elites and intellectuals. This approach often overlooked causal factors like Arianism's adaptability to barbarian conversion strategies, as seen in Ulfilas's missionary work among the Goths in the , prioritizing theological condemnation over empirical analysis of its widespread adoption. Modern reassessments, emerging from 19th- and 20th-century scholarship, have challenged these distortions by reconstructing Arianism through fragmentary evidence and contextual analysis, portraying it less as a fringe aberration and more as a legitimate interpretive tradition rooted in ante-Nicene subordinationist tendencies evident at the Council of Antioch in 268 CE. Scholars like R.P.C. Hanson and Rowan Williams have argued that Arius's theology aligned closely with conservative exegesis of texts like Proverbs 8:22, viewing the Son as eternally generated yet distinct in essence from the Father, rather than a created being in the simplistic sense attributed by critics. These revisions highlight how Nicene dominance, backed by Constantinian politics, marginalized alternative Christologies, with secular and Protestant historians questioning the councils' dogmatic innovations as influenced by Hellenistic philosophy over pure biblical fidelity. While some contemporary reassessments risk relativizing doctrinal truth by framing the controversy primarily as a socio-political power struggle, empirical focus on Arianism's endurance—persisting until the 7th century in Visigothic Spain and influencing Gothic Bible translations like the —underscores its substantive theological viability absent biased suppression.

Enduring Influence and Modern Variants

Impact on Later Non-Trinitarian Movements

Arianism's subordinationist Christology, which posited the Son as begotten by the Father and thus inferior in essence, exerted an indirect but persistent influence on subsequent non-Trinitarian theologies, providing scriptural precedents for rejecting co-equal divinity within the Godhead. Despite the marginalization of Arian groups after the Council of Constantinople in 381 CE, similar arguments resurfaced during the Reformation era, particularly in , a 16th-century Polish-Italian movement led by Faustus Socinus (1539–1604). Socinians denied the Trinity and Christ's eternal pre-existence, viewing him as a human empowered by God rather than divine by nature, yet their emphasis on the Father's supremacy mirrored Arian relational hierarchy, leading contemporaries to classify it as a variant of Arian heresy. In 17th- and 18th-century England, Arian ideas gained traction among rationalist theologians, notably Samuel Clarke (1675–1729), whose The Scripture Doctrine of the Trinity (1712) defended a "moderate Arianism" by asserting the Son's derivation from the Father and subordination in authority and essence, drawing on biblical texts like John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"). Clarke's work, influenced by Isaac Newton's private anti-Trinitarian views, fueled debates within Anglicanism and contributed to the emergence of English Unitarianism, where figures like John Locke integrated Arian-like unitarianism with advocacy for religious toleration and scriptural primacy over creeds. These developments preserved Arian emphases on monotheistic unity against perceived Trinitarian polytheism, influencing later liberal Christian thought. The 19th- and 20th-century restorationist movements further echoed Arianism, most prominently in Jehovah's Witnesses, founded by Charles Taze Russell in the 1870s and formalized under Joseph Rutherford by 1931. Their doctrine holds Jesus as the archangel Michael and the first creation of Jehovah God, implying a time before his existence, directly paralleling Arius's formula en pote ouk en ("there was [a time] when he was not"). While Witnesses reject the Arian label—emphasizing worship of Jesus as a distinct being subordinate yet worthy of honor—their Christology revives core Arian tenets of creaturely origin and functional inferiority, impacting over 8 million adherents worldwide as of 2023 by challenging Nicene orthodoxy through Bible-only exegesis. This revival demonstrates Arianism's enduring role in fostering non-Trinitarian interpretations, often independent of historical filiation due to centuries of doctrinal enforcement against such views.

Contemporary Groups with Arian Elements

The Jehovah's Witnesses, founded in the late 19th century by Charles Taze Russell and organized under Joseph Franklin Rutherford, hold a Christology that parallels Arian subordinationism by teaching that Jesus Christ is the first created being, identified as the archangel Michael, who was begotten by God the Father through divine power rather than being co-eternal or consubstantial with the Father. This view asserts Jesus' pre-existence as a subordinate agent in creation but denies his full divinity, maintaining that worship belongs solely to Jehovah, distinguishing it from classical Arian practices that permitted veneration of the Son. With approximately 8.7 million active members worldwide as of recent reports, the group rejects the Trinity as a post-biblical innovation and emphasizes Jesus' role as a perfect human ransom sacrifice. The Iglesia ni Cristo, established in 1914 by Felix Ysagun Manalo in the Philippines, exhibits Arian-like elements in its doctrine that Jesus is the Son of God but not divine in essence, viewing him as a created human exalted by the Father rather than eternally begotten or equal to God. This non-Trinitarian stance posits strict monotheism with Christ subordinate as a mediator and prophet, akin to Arian emphasis on the Father's supremacy, though INC theology frames Jesus' role more through restorationist claims of Manalo as the final messenger. The church claims over 2.8 million members globally, primarily in the Philippines, and prohibits Trinitarian formulations as pagan influences. Smaller contemporary groups, such as certain Biblical Unitarian fellowships, occasionally incorporate subordinationist interpretations where Christ is seen as pre-existent yet derived from the Father, echoing Arian logic of eternal generation without co-equality, though many reject pre-existence entirely in favor of a human-only origin for Jesus. These scattered assemblies, lacking centralized structures, prioritize scriptural literalism over creedal orthodoxy and number in the thousands, often emerging from 19th-20th century restoration movements. No direct historical continuity exists with ancient Arianism, as these groups arose independently amid Protestant critiques of conciliar theology, reviving subordinationism through Bible-only exegesis.

Recent Scholarly and Theological Discussions

In recent historiography, scholars have challenged traditional narratives of Arianism as a monolithic subordinationist heresy originated by Arius. Marilyn Dunn, in her 2019 monograph Arianism, contends that Arius's theology was not an innovation subordinating the Son in essence but a defense against Gnostic and Manichaean dualism, emphasizing the Father's unique sovereignty while affirming the Son's exalted creation. She argues that a cohesive "Arian" system was retroactively fabricated by Nicene partisans like Athanasius after the 325 Council of Nicaea, and applies of to explain homoian Christianity's with Gothic , aiding conversions and among groups like the Visigoths until Reccared's 589 conversion to Nicene orthodoxy. Theological debates have intensified around perceived Arian echoes in evangelical Trinitarianism, particularly the eternal functional subordination (EFS) doctrine. Advanced by Wayne Grudem in his 1994 Systematic Theology, EFS posits the Son's eternal submission to the Father in role—not essence—as analogous to complementarian gender hierarchies, tracing to George Knight III's 1977 linkage of Trinitarian relations to marital subordination. Critics, including Carl Beckwith in his October 2025 symposia address, classify EFS as semi-Arian, arguing it imports ontological inequality via eternal authority gradients, contravening Nicaea's homoousios and risking soteriological errors by impairing the Son's mediatorial equality. A 2022 Ligonier Ministries survey revealed 73% of U.S. evangelicals affirming Jesus as the Father's first creation and 43% viewing him merely as a great teacher, signaling widespread Trinitarian confusion amenable to subordinationist interpretations. Beyond , observers detect Arian residues in liberal theology's reduction of Christ to a derived moral exemplar. Dwight Longenecker, in a 2024 analysis, identifies this in reinterpretations demoting the Incarnation—e.g., Mary as a resilient unwed mother, the Crucifixion as sociopolitical martyrdom, and Resurrection as subjective inspiration—mirroring Arius's generational ontology over eternal co-equality. These discussions highlight causal factors like cultural complementarian defenses and modernist pressuring , with conservative theologians urging retrieval of patristic refutations to counter biases in academic portrayals favoring "diversity" in early doctrines.

References

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